Apple Hopes To Deliver Crippling Blow To Kindle Fire At Tomorrow's Event
Tomorrow's "education"/publishing event will start Apple's response to the Amazon threat.
Tomorrow's "education"/publishing event will start Apple's response to the Amazon threat.
One ill-informed analyst thinks the Kindle Fire cost Apple a couple million iPad sales last month.
Amazon recently announced that it expects to have sold over four million Kindle devices in December. Though this figure might sound impressive, on just one day (Christmas Day) Apple saw an estimated 4.2 million iOS device activations, suggesting that Amazon has a long way to go before it can catch up with the cool cats in Cupertino, CA.
Are you unhappy with your Kindle Fire purchase? This video is for you.
Good morning! Today's iWake is now available. The SuperBowl streams live to select iPhone customers and complete your iTunes TV seasons. Have a listen ...
Good morning! Today's iWake is now available. One day you may be able to use your iPhone and iPad during takeoff and landing. Have a listen ...
Until this week, the Apple iPad largely defined the emergent tablet market. Starting this week, however, that is almost certainly going to change, with the introduction of Amazon’s Kindle Fire, which arrives on the scene at less than half the cost of the iPad 2.
Check out this video comparison of the new Kindle Fire and the Apple iPad 2.
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Good morning! Today's iWake is now available. Should you get a Kindle Fire? Have a listen ...
Apple fans may chuckle, but the arrival this week of Amazon’s first-generation Kindle Fire may have a significant impact on what direction Apple takes with future iDevices. In fact, when we look back at this week in a few years, we might remember it as the week that most changed the iPad and for the better.
Twelve days before its Kindle Fire tablet arrives, Amazon has announced a new service that makes buying a Kindle device even more valuable. The Kindle Owners’ Lending Library is available now via the Amazon website.
On November 15, Amazon will release the Kindle Fire, the online retailer's answer to the iPad. However, for those that want to experience the Fire without spending the $199 to do so, there is now a solution, according to iDevice Daily.
In November, Amazon will release its long awaiting tablet, the Amazon Fire. The arrival of the $199 device, however, isn’t keeping Apple’s CEO up at night with worries. In fact, Tim Cook suggested the Fire’s entry would do nothing to Apple’s market share in the tablet arena, according to BGR.
Each week AppAdvice offers hundreds of stories about what is new with the iPhone/iPod touch and iPad and about the tech industry in general. Here are ten of the best for the week that was.
With the November 15 debut of Amazon’s Kindle Fire now official, attention turns to what this means to Apple and the iPad and to the tablet industry as a whole. The answers might surprise you.
Amazon announces the Kindle Fire, but will you want to jump into the flames? Plus, some wacky apps.
Amazon’s highly anticipated “iPad-killer,” the Kindle Fire, will be priced at $199 it was announced today. This price-point alone could soon change the face of the entire tablet market and affect Apple accordingly, says Bloomberg News.
Amazon is expected to unveil its new Kindle tablet device tomorrow at a press conference at 10 a.m. EDT. The so-called “Kindle Fire” will include a modified version of Android and retail for under $300, according to TechCrunch.